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OMAN FATALLY HURT BY JUMP INP IN BLAZE George ea Scorched, Misses Mattress Into Which Wife Jumped. HIS SKULL , Two Families Cut Off in ’ Upper Floors by Fire ¢ Started in Hallway. IS BROKEN. Beven persons escaped being Durved to death by means of a rope) lowered from a second-story window and another leaped from the third story to safety on a mattress during @ fire early today that destroyed the three-story frame bullding at No. 401 Railroad avenue, East New York. George Sanksen, thirty yenrs old, fe in Kings County Hospital with « compound fracture of the skull and Severe burns on the hands, face and body. After helping his wife out of * the third-story window and watch- ‘img her jump and tand safely he * found the flames hemming him in "and he crawied through the window > gnd@ hung by his hands from the ill. ia rescue at hand his strength Clinging there with flames licking he narrow ledge he waited while the who had held the mattress fate which his wife had jumped, made feady to catch him. Suddenly he PWropped and his body, striking the epping of a window on the second floor, carromed and fell clear of the Sanksen struck the pave- ment on his head and was taken to the hospital unconscious. “SAVED LIVES OF TWO FAMILIES WITH ROPE. ~ Whe presence of mind of Adolph Mets Kortegrast, who lived on the second Y Boor with his wife, Helen, and two Phildren, not only saved them but also , Mra. Fredericka Kroemar and Augus- ‘Ytwa, sixteen, and Frederick, fourteen, wife and children of Frederick Kroe- mar, who was in his bake shop on the first floor of the building. Kortegrast was aroused when he sapere the frantic shrieks of Kroemar, 4who had smelled smoke in the cellar and ran upstairs to find the fret floor ablase. The baker tried to go the steps to the second floor, but flames drove him back and he @ warning to the sleeping fam- above. Kortegrast aroused his and children and the Kroemar and ran into the kitchen where & heavy rope. tied one end around the waist four-year-old daughter Helen wered her through the kitchen ‘to the crowd on the McKinley ue side of the house. Six-year- Otto was next and then Mrs. Kortegrast, followed by the two Kroe- mar children and their mother, Then Kortegrast tied the rope around @ @tationary washtub in the kitchen - * gad, crawling through the window, the street. time Banksen and bis ty-six, were scream- @ window of their floor. The flames floor and had cut off of the stairs, and art ep EPE ne E 8 he H& E H Charles Kasuer and Frank Bayly, eeeing their plight, ran into a house Detective Mulvey of ihe Gonne, ave- mue police station had heard Kroe- mar’s first warning and run into the eee, and half way up the stairs in ‘t to save those in the building, it he had to retreat, with severe on his right hand and face. He was attended by the ambulance eur- oe a and went home. Kroemar, who owned the buildin; mage would probably e ceed $10,000, not includin; bake bop and the contents o: the three apartments. The building was covered by $8,000 Insurance. (2s DENIES MOTION TO WHITE. Disorderly Pantor Gets Set Back in Court, Bupreme Court Justice Weeks to-day denied the motion made several days ago by former Assistant District-Attor- ney James W. Oxborne for a certificate of reasonable doubt for the Rey Bouck White, who was sentenced to serve a » term of six months in the penitentiary Margistrate Campbell, for creating a disturbance at the Calvary Baptist Chureh CASTORIA For Infants and Childron. You Have g RAMAN SAL Doesn’t Blame the Man and Says the Woman in the Case Is Wonderful. SCIENTIFIC STUDY DID IT As the Husband Learned, the Wife Says, She Lost His Af- fection and Teacher Got It. 7 In her artistically furnished suite on one of the upper floors of the Pa- terno apartments overlooking the Hudson at One Hundred and Six- teenth street, Mra. Brownlie Rathbone ‘Weaverson, a fascinating woman of sixty-two, but vivacious as a woman much her juntor, told an Evening World reporter to-day what lay baca of her formal complaint in which she asks for $250,000 damages against Mra. Caroline Frame, one of the wealthiest Christian Scientists in New York. Mrs. Weaverson accused Mrs. Frame of having alienated the affections of Fred Weaverson, Mrs. Weavorson's husband, and Mra. Framo's secretary. Both women are wealthy. Mrs. ‘Weaverson's apartments speak of her wealth. On a floor beneath in the same building are the apartments of Mrs, Frame, who figures as the woman who came between husband and wife, who had been wedded for thirty yeqrs. KNOWS DANGER OF JEALOUSY AND AVOIDS IT. “I suppose,” began Mrs, Weaverson, “that a woman of a more jealous disposition might have taken a dif- ferent and more scrious method of seeking redress when she saw her husband gradually being won from her. Iam thinking of Mrs, Carman, the Freeport woman, who, while she may be gullty or innocent of the charge against her, certainly did not know the first laws of life and that her jealousy would ultimately burt her instead of others, “I am content to let the law take its course against Mrs. Frame. I don't want money. I want justice and my husband. Mra, Frame seeks to show that I was inspired to bring this sult by a hatred of Christian Science. I am not a hater of Science, but believe in the Mazdaznan teach- ings, Mrs, Frame's conduct toward me may have been Scientific but cer- tainly not Christian. “My husband, when he came from the West some years ago, was mak- ing only $25 a week and he took up Christian Science, Mrs, Frame was hia teacher and an able one, too. She ia a wonderful woman and my hus- band is a wonderful man and I know that in his heart of hearts that he loves me und that-Mrs, Frame hates me intensely In her heart, “We were getting along very hap- pily, not only my husband and I but Mra. Frame and we built a summer home in Westchester County, I my- self designed the house and called it Greystone Crest, but I never lived in it, Mrs, Frame bought property with. in a stone's throw of our estate and built 4 home also, Then my hus- band’s attentions to me grew cold and I suspected that his interest in Mrs, Frame was more than that of employee toward employer, He told me that in Science a student could never leave his faithful teacher and that he must stand by her, He said our summer home would not be for AL LE Ge Rare THE EVENING | ite \E Wife of 62 Says Christian Science aK SEVEN, Made Her Husband’s Love Grow Cold; Sues Rich Woman of 72 for $250,000. WOE R. ERED: "WEAVERSON dorful personality, I should say a magnetic personality, and if any- thing, she has hypnotized my hus- band, HUSBAND CAME BACK AFTER LEAVING HER, “Not so long ago Mr. Weavorson went south with her and told me It was all over between us. As soon as he reached her ho changed his mind and sent for me and when I arrived ho asked my — forgivenoss. Sho .mplored him not to return to me, saying that I was a freak and a fadalst.” On another occasion Mrs, Weaver-} son related, when sho and her hus- band were about to cs thirty-third wedding which was also the ann her husband’s fiftty-fourth birthday, she prepared @ dinner in his honor. She confidently expected him to at- tend, but sho sald she found him en- joying a dinner given in his honor by Mrs. Frame in her own apartment. “She did not even invite me,” com- mented Mrs. Weaverson. After the foast, she said, Weaverson stopped eating at his own home, but continued to sleep there as he does now. “This was her regular course of conduct toward me," Mrs, Weaverson continued, “I remember sitting on tho veranda one day when Mrs, Frame drove up to our country home in her machine and took Fred away for the whole day, They went swim. ming and had a bully time, but no nounced to-day, Greece. South Dakota, | ginta, Colorado, Blase in T. A ment D: to Fire-Escapes. ‘all fire in the basement of the ive-story tenement at No. 83 Norfolk atreot this morning drove twenty fright- ened families to the street. Though there was little danger from the flames, residents of the tenement, which is di- rectly in the rear of the one at No. 0 Essex street, where eight persons lost in @ fire a month ago, wasted wetting to the fire-eacapes or Ww BLD, FRIDAY JULY 10 1916 MRS. :CAROLINE AMEL, NEW BATTLESHIPS NAMED. Four to Be Known as Arisona, Call- Idaho and Misats WASHINGTON, July 10.—The names of the four new super-dreadnoughts now building or authorized zona, California, Idaho and Mississippi, Secretary of the Navy Daniels un- ill be the Ari- The last two were so named in order that the States of Mississippi and Idaho might not lose their ships because of the recent sale of two battleships to ‘It Isn't every day,” said Secretary Daniels as he announced the names of the new vessels, “that a Secretary of the Navy has the privilege of naming & quartet of battleships. newly named battleships, every State in the Union now has named for it exce We West Vir- ‘aroling, New es Soores from an undeter- vitation was oxtended to mo. This | mined cause in, oe joreroom beneath srs cruel, but not halt so bitter. as | Se, Deper and t of Al it Yinuerg, | “ie tilted’ tho. bullding swith when Mrs. Framo started to visit! smoke and caused damage estimated me every day and ask me when I | at $50. was going to leave my husband, “Tl hardly blame my husband. He did not realize that while he was at. taining a perfect knowledge of Chris- tian Science he was not aware of the personal love that was growing be- tween them." Mrs. Frame wan not at home to; day, At her apartments it was said that sho was at Wildwood, her country home, She is 2 daughter of the Iate Samuel Willetts and widow of Charles P. Frame, a wealthy tn- surance man who died in 1903, leaving her moro than $1,000,000, ———_—>— EMIGRATION INCREASES. Figa Show More § sengers Are Sailing for Europe. rage Pas- Comparative reports have been re- ceived from passenger steamship lines of Atlantic travel for the first aix months of this year and la The emigrant showing was the most significant, Last year 178,679 third clase and steerage passengers sailed from New York for Europe. The number this year was 267 037, an increase of 45 per cent, 693,685, and this year 464,337 @ crease of 33 per cent. $150 New York Suburban Lots for 7 aiitusted 8 miles from New York city Broa m mi ot | unin sind ("rained Mop ch me, that I could not occupy It. “Mre. Frame is a gifted woman, seventy-two years old, with @ won- ming at one: aia pais ee With the 8 battleshi; t Maryland, Montana, ‘ashington, North. C Mexico and Tennessee." pa FIRE ROUTS 20 FAMILIES, Ba a ot tun ROOSEVELT PLANS BIVISION OF MEXICO, MORENO CHARGES Dictator’s Minister of Foreign _ Relations Reaches Vera Cruz iN in His Flight. VERA CRUZ, Mexico, July 10.— “The Carranza revolution has tri- umphed, but the United States will soon learn that while it may put a President in power in Mexico it can- not keep him there,” was tho state- ment made to-day by former Minister of Foreign Relations Moheno. He was jon board the steamer Espagne and admitted his departure from Mexico was in the nature of a flight. Huerta's former Cabinet officer was emphatic in his assertion as to the hand Americans might play in Mexi- can affairs. He declared Huerta was not to blame for the killing of Fran- cisco Madero. “I know who killed Madero,” said Moheno, “and as soon as I get to New York I will tell all about it.” Moheno sald that while Minister of Foreign Relations he learned that Col. Roosevelt inserted a secret plank in the Progressive platform provid- ing that Mexico shall be divided into |four or five parte. The Democrats and Republicans believe in the same principle, Moheno charges, “Francisco Escudero, Carranza's Minister of Foreign relations, has shown me letters from Americans which proved to me that Roosevelt's progressives have such a plank,” he said. Moheno sent a thrust in the direc- tion of President Wilson by saying: “While President Wilson has been occupied with high ideals, 8,000 Mext- cans have been killed daily for the past six months. Figure out for yourself the cost of idealism.” LOS ANGELES, Cal. July 10.— News reached here to- aay that a force of Mexican Federals on Tuesday am- bushed a Conatitutionalist force in Sonora, near the American border, Killing forty-seven. —— MEXICAN FEDERALS ABANDON GUAYM.'S BALTILLO, Mexico, June 9, via Laredo, July 10.—Guaymas, one of the most important seaports on the west coast of Mexico was evacuated 1b Federals late to-day, according t advices to Gen, Carranza, ——— “HELLO” MINIMUM WAGE $9. | ic Salary of G Com OLYMPIA, Wash., July 10.—The State Minimum Wage Commission adopted last night a rate of §9 a week as the minimum for telephone girls throughout the State, except in small exchanges. This the fourth minimum wage ion, the others BoE tho’ week for mercantile work: ein, i 90 for factory workers and $9 for laundry and dye workers. Fised by jate tion of Miss Orleans, President Wilson's favorite cousin, operated on for appendicitis Mary Smith of New after belt rushed at midnight from the White House to the Naval Hospital, was reported to- % to be much im- roved. rene ‘lson spent a short im ith hi y and it was stated that she will Falmout certainly recover. » EY aa Ritz this week was the largest of Beason. filmy tulle skirts with charmeuse to foot. “JUST TOOK A NOTION,” SAYS MAN WHO JUMPED FROM BROOKLYN BRIDGE omens When Hauled Out He Denies Suicide Attempt and Says Water Was Fine. After eating in a restaurant near the Brooklyn Bridge on the Brooklyn side to-day James Minton, a laborer, 4 thirty-seven, started to walk across the bridge. He had prospects of a job in a leather warehouse on Gold street. As he reached the Man- hattan tower he looked down into the East River, Then he climbed out through tha iron grating on the south side of t brs. and jumped. Men on the nearby piers and passengers on several river steamships saw the splash but didn’t know what caused {t until the head o®a man bobbed up and began to do an Australian craw) stroke for the nearest pier. A passing tug picked him up and turned him loose on pier 19. A watch- man on the pier called the St. Greg- ory’s Hospital ambulance and a po- liceman, When the ambulance reached pier 19 Minton, serene and well cooled off, was sitting on an emp- ty beer keg. “I just took a notion to do it,” Min- ton told Patrolman O'Neill, “and I must say the water was fine.” Minton insisted that he had no thought of suicide, but O'Neill couldn't see why @ perfectly happy man would take such @ leap and he placed him under arrest for attempting suicide, Minton was put to bed in the hos- pital. —_——_— OCEAN BEACH NOTES. Martin Ford Is kno 1 as the ac- tuary of Great South Bay. He knows just } long the fish are going to » he gets after them. ‘Through the efforts of C. P. Brown- ing a pulmotor hag been ordered for the bathing beach, Kinsey of the Ocean jation wants an amanu- ensis to trans::ibe on the offictal minutes the sj; -eches of the officers at the annua, mecting. Strong pressure ts being brought on Rufus Hynds, chairman of the Fire Prevention Bureau, to make “Billy” Danueman chief of the volunteer fire department. Mr. Danneman made a Ballant record at the only blase of the year at tho beach. Playing pinochle on the hotel porch is more thrilling sport than slaugh- tering blow-fish in the bay, according to Paul Franzel, A report that Hans Klintrop cap- tured first prize in the hesitation waltz contest Saturday night proved erroneous. He got a prize, but it was in the lotte:.” one-step, 4 Grateful Women Thanks Anty Dr udge Mre. Progressive—‘Anty Drudge, I have you to thank for starting me to be an up-to-date woman. I was a slave to the washtub and my house until I learned from you that all ‘women can do their work well and keep house right and still have time for outside interests‘ Af they will use Fels-Naptha Soap. I am never without it, and it has made me a different ‘woman and John a happier man.” Anty Drudge—"Many a man has thanked me for telling his wife about Fels-Napths Soap, and the women say they wouldn't believe it was Possible that their work could be made so much easier.” ath you to do. r Hf (- the es pe eens Latest Transparent Gown Reveals Hose of Darker Hue PARIS, July 10—Anthony J. Drexel’s dinner 4 A notable feature of the affair was the latest Parisian craze for wore these gowns, whose transparency reveals hoi texture of darker hue than the skirt to make them stand out in relief, The general result is to give a much more undraped effect than if the wearers appeared in uncovered silk fleshings, and when under the big chandelier the entire figure was revealed in perfect outline from throat ce at the Hotet the series he has been giving this tunics, A number of the dancers of spider web BRITISH WARNING Be Trouble if Thibet Con- vention Is Rejected. Secretary. of Commons and said: of China.” The Darjeoling conference, at which representatives of Great Britain, 'Thi- bet. and China havo been discuss the subject of Thibetan autonomy, has been in session since last fall, and # convention was recently drafted and presented for signature to the three Governments. pial eo HEARST LOSES SUIT. Appellate Court Says N. Y. Central May Rua Tr is Along River- aide Drive. Wi'llam Randolph Hearst to-day lost his suit for an injunction to re- strain the N, Y. Central Railroad from using the tracks from Seventy- second street to Ninety-sixth street along the Hudson River as a place to operate and store its freight trains, Mr. Hearst obtained a permanent injunction from Supreme Court Jus- tice Phiibin restraining the railroad company from operating its froight trains and using the tracks men- tioned but the Appellate Court now reverses that decisio1 —_—- PRIZE FOR A HORSESHO! (From the Chicago Journal.) ‘The Rritish Road Improvement has of- fered a prize of $500 for an improved horseshoe which will afford the animal @ sound footing upon the modern #mooth pavements and at the same tine mini- mize the amount of damuge done to the roadway by the existing types of shoes. Oh! What Comfart to Footsore Folks! as if you couldn't stand on them a minute longer? Want to throw those torturing shoes out of the window? hen you surely need a cake of Johnson's Foot Soap, It has been giving relief to feet like yours for 44 years! Almost anything could be sold as afoot treatment fora year or two— until folks got Wh&e—but only the reai thing can stand the test of time. Get a cake to-night—25c at any drug store— and treat yourself tosolid foot -comfort . Frees the feet from corns aud callouses, Don’t believe everything you hear in this world. It’s far better only to believe what you see. If you see the same thing happening day after day and week after week, and if it always happens the same— then believe it. It’s pretty sure to be true. Day after day Fels-Naptha Soap will do your cleaning for you. better than it has ever been done before, in half the time, with quarter the effort. Week after week it will make wash- ing a pleasure instead of a nightmare. It will dissolve the dirt, leaving only the smallest and easiest part of the work for It works for you in cool or lukewarm water. It does away with hard rubbing and a MP It will do it . Better buy Fels-Naptha by the or box, GIVEN TO CHINA Sir Edward Grey Says There Will LONDON, July 10.—A warning that trouble is Hable to result from China's refusal to sign the convention in re- gard to what territory shall compose outer and inner Thibet reached by the recent convention at Darjeeling, In- dia, was issued to China to-day by Sir Edward Grey, the British Foreign Sir Edward was speaking on the subject of the appropriations for the Foreign Office in tho House “If China does not sign, but resorts to an aggressive policy, the conse- quences must be disastrous for China. There certainly will be grave trouble on the Indian frontier which will re- quire Great Britain to take up the matter seriously with the Government ad Cramped, hot, aching, tired feet? 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